Housing ministry publishes draft decree for VIS and VIP housing sales in pesos

Colombia's Ministry of Housing, City and Territory has published a draft decree setting the sale of Social Interest Housing (VIS) and Priority Interest Housing (VIP) in Colombian pesos, rather than minimum wages. The document establishes caps of 135 minimum wages for VIS and 90 for VIP, with a limit of 280 minimum wages in San Andrés, Providencia, and Santa Catalina for rural social interest housing.

Colombia's Ministry of Housing, City and Territory has released a draft decree aimed at regulating the pricing of Social Interest Housing (VIS) and Priority Interest Housing (VIP). Under the proposal, these homes will be sold exclusively in Colombian pesos, removing references to minimum wages in transactions.

The draft sets specific limits: a cap of 135 monthly minimum wages for VIS and 90 for VIP. In the islands of San Andrés, Providencia, and Santa Catalina, the maximum value for rural social interest housing reaches 280 minimum wages. Sellers must disclose the total price clearly, verifiably, and in pesos from the moment the buyer expresses intent to purchase, whether through reservation, purchase promise, fiduciary assignment, or equivalent document.

The set price will remain the only one enforceable until contract completion and cannot exceed the maximum cap in effect at the time of adjudication or acquisition. The Superintendency of Industry and Commerce will handle inspection, surveillance, and enforcement of these rules.

This initiative aims to enhance transparency in the affordable housing market, though the draft is still open for comments and final adjustments by the ministry.

Related Articles

Housing Minister Iván Poduje announces reversal of Colonia Dignidad expropriation at press conference, highlighting budget priorities amid human rights controversy.
Image generated by AI

Housing minister Poduje announces reversal of Colonia Dignidad expropriation

Reported by AI Image generated by AI

Housing Minister Iván Poduje announced the government will reverse the Colonia Dignidad expropriation decree due to budget constraints. The move aims to prioritize housing and reconstruction funds but has drawn opposition criticism for overlooking memory and human rights commitments. PS and Frente Amplio lawmakers call for dialogue with President José Antonio Kast.

In 2025, Barranquilla saw a 58.39% rise in new housing sales, outpacing the national growth of 12.45% by 4.6 times, per Camacol Atlántico data. Mayor Alejandro Char credited the 'Mi Techo Propio' subsidy program for this performance. The increase occurred across all housing market segments.

Reported by AI

In 2025, Bogotá recorded 49,883 housing starts, the highest since 2001, up 11.3% from 2024. Sixty-one percent were social and priority interest housing. The Habitat Secretariat highlights the impact on families and job creation.

Mayor Carlos Fernando Galán signed Decree 117 of 2026 on April 14, modifying Decree 642 of 2025 and setting rules for over 150,000 informal street vendors in Bogotá's public spaces. The measure establishes maximum occupation capacities per zone and aims to organize areas without harming vulnerable people.

Reported by AI

The Council of State provisionally suspended Decree 1469 of 2025, which set the 2026 minimum wage at $1,750,905 with a 23.7% increase. The government must issue a new transitory decree within eight days, while the original decree remains in effect until published. Various sectors reacted, from guild support to the executive's defense.

This website uses cookies

We use cookies for analytics to improve our site. Read our privacy policy for more information.
Decline